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#1
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Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I
am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#2
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Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks
"Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#3
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I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the
BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#4
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Out of all the braided line that I've tried... the Stren seemed to do alot
better for me. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#5
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Yea Charles, we might be on to something here. I also like that its ROUND
like real fishing line. I loaded up one of my TD-x's & it cast like mono. Warren "Charles Summers" wrote in message ... Out of all the braided line that I've tried... the Stren seemed to do alot better for me. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#6
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![]() Since I started using it Warren, I will not go back to power-pro or any other braided line. The 30 lb stren superbraid is fantastic. It casts nice, is smooth throught the guides and retains it's color about 3x as long as power-pro or fireline. I think the only exception would be if I knew I was fishing heavy pads, then I would get the fireline, nothing cuts through pads like that. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#7
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lol Randy - try the 65# Stren. I cant see any living plant holding up to
this stuff. I know you wrote me back at home but I'm here till 10 pm, can you forward that email to me here? WW "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... Since I started using it Warren, I will not go back to power-pro or any other braided line. The 30 lb stren superbraid is fantastic. It casts nice, is smooth throught the guides and retains it's color about 3x as long as power-pro or fireline. I think the only exception would be if I knew I was fishing heavy pads, then I would get the fireline, nothing cuts through pads like that. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#8
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Are you using it on baitcasters or spinning ?
"alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... Since I started using it Warren, I will not go back to power-pro or any other braided line. The 30 lb stren superbraid is fantastic. It casts nice, is smooth throught the guides and retains it's color about 3x as long as power-pro or fireline. I think the only exception would be if I knew I was fishing heavy pads, then I would get the fireline, nothing cuts through pads like that. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#9
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![]() I have stopped using braid on my spinning reels and only use them on my baitcasters. Just a preference. I use one spinning rod for wacky rigging and the other for Flukes. I prefer the yozuri hybrid on them that stuff is tough. I fish it in the sticks all the time and get my fish out. For thereal nasty it's sb and a flipping stick "Jerry Barton (NervisRek)" wrote in message ... Are you using it on baitcasters or spinning ? "alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... Since I started using it Warren, I will not go back to power-pro or any other braided line. The 30 lb stren superbraid is fantastic. It casts nice, is smooth throught the guides and retains it's color about 3x as long as power-pro or fireline. I think the only exception would be if I knew I was fishing heavy pads, then I would get the fireline, nothing cuts through pads like that. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
#10
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Are you using it on baitcasters or spinning ?
"alwaysfishking" wrote in message ... Since I started using it Warren, I will not go back to power-pro or any other braided line. The 30 lb stren superbraid is fantastic. It casts nice, is smooth throught the guides and retains it's color about 3x as long as power-pro or fireline. I think the only exception would be if I knew I was fishing heavy pads, then I would get the fireline, nothing cuts through pads like that. "go-bassn" wrote in message ... I think I've found a braided line that I finally like. I'm headed to the BASS Open on the Hudson River next week, and one of the primary patterns is fishing a nast-tough weed called water chestnut. I bought some 65" Stren Super Braid & spooled it up yesterday. It behaves great on a pitch & cast, the first line of its kind that I feel comfortable with. Warren "Bob La Londe" wrote in message ... Yeah, I got the compared to same weight line thing. Thanks "Sergio Escutia" wrote in message om... Bob... Regarding your original message found at the end of this one. I am the one holding the 36 lb snook caught from the surf in Mazatlan, México that is shown on the PowerPro brochure. I do have to tell you that PowerPro is my favorite PE braided line but those words on the brochure were not precisely the words I used, but that is another story. The snook was caught using 30 lb PowerPro on a conventional ABU 6500 CS Mag that I use to surf fish. I was casting from shore a soft swimbait on a jig head. Using the same reel (and rod) I am able to cast a 4 oz. lead 180 yds. away with 30 lb PowerPro. Using 30 lb nylon monofilament I could reach maybe half the distance at the most. That particular snook was caught casting around 100 yds away from shore to a submerged rock that I am sure I could not have reached using 30 lb. nylon monofilament. Not the typical largemouth fishing scenario for sure, nor even the typical snook cast. ![]() Hopes this clears your doubt. Best wishes. Sergio Escutia From: Bob La Londe ) Subject: Power Pro View: Complete Thread (23 articles) Original Format Newsgroups: rec.outdoors.fishing.bass Date: 2004-04-05 07:50:37 PST Ok, I do not get this. Sure Power Pro is better than many of hte older braids, but I have issues with this fromt he Power Pro website. "PowerPro lets me cast up to twice as far as with monofilament. I can always cast to where the fish are with PowerPro." - Sergio Escutia (36-lb. snook, 30-lb. PowerPro) I have experimented with PP vs Flourocarbo for pitchign which is in my opinion one of the applications most affected by anything that can be affected by anything when it comes to distance. 20LB Seaguar easily pitches further than 50LB PP. Even a rooky like me can see the difference on identical rods with the same weight weight and plastic. -- Public Fishing Forums Fishing Link Index www.YumaBassMan.com webmaster at YumaBsssMan dot com -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ |
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